Eric Schmidt on business culture, technology, and social issues

When Eric Schmidt handed the reins of CEO at Google back over to cofounder Larry Page recently to take on the role of the company’s executive chairman, with a more external focus, news reports predictably recounted his oft-made joke that his role at Google had been to provide “adult supervision” for the company’s cofounders, Page and Sergey Brin. Indeed, no one could argue that in Schmidt’s ten years at the helm, Google had grown up into an extraordinary force in global business. Schmidt’s track record atop the leader in Internet searches stands as remarkable story of steady growth, expanded reach and influence, and an innovative management style that will remain scrutinized as Schmidt, 56, takes on new duties.

Google now produces close to $30 billion in annual revenues, and its domain is growing well beyond search. The company’s YouTube unit, with some 40 percent of the market for Web videos, is generating profits for the first time, and its Android operating system hums at the center of more smartphones than Apple’s iPhone.

Yet the organization that Schmidt was instrumental in building still depends on hiring and retaining the brightest talent, as well as encouraging deep collaboration and granting substantial creative free space to its teams. In this talk at a McKinsey conference in Washington, DC, in mid-March, Schmidt spoke with McKinsey director James Manyika and described Google’s approach to talent management, the mobile and data technology trends he sees shaping the coming years, and his views on public-policy issues such as joblessness and education.

Related articles

August 2010—Advancing technologies and their swift adoption are upending traditional business models. Senior executives need to think strategically about how to prepare their organizations for the challenging new environment.more

Stay connected

About Insights & Publications

The creation of knowledge supports McKinsey’s core mission: helping our clients achieve distinctive, lasting, and substantial performance improvements. We publish our insights and those of external experts to help advance the practice of management and provide leaders with facts on which to base business and policy decisions. Views expressed by third-party authors are theirs alone.